Here's who would be the winners and losers under the latest Senate Republican tax bill

A Joint Committee on Taxation analysis of the Senate
GOP tax bill leaked late Wednesday.

The report found that in 2019, 8.1% of Americans would
see their taxes increase by at least $100, while 61.7% would
see a cut of at least $100.

In subsequent years, however, fewer people would see a
tax cut — especially after changes to the individual brackets
expire.

A new analysis of the Senate Republican tax bill found that while
most people would see an initial tax cut under the plan, many
would see their taxes increase over time without subsequent
legislative adjustments.

The analysis by the Joint Committee on Taxation, prepared on
Monday and leaked late Wednesday, found
that the GOP bill, named the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, would
increase taxes for some Americans as soon as 2019. By 2027,
according to the analysis, nearly all Americans would see an
increase or no cut at all.

The primary reason most Americans would not see a tax cut in
further-out years is that individual tax rates would
change — adjustments to those brackets would last through 2025,
while the corporate rate cut, to 20% from 35%, would be
permanent.

That means that by 2027, 84.1% of Americans would see no change
or an increase of at least $100 in their taxes compared with
under current law, the analysis found.

Lower-income households would be hit harder in later years,
according to the analysis — 88.4% of people making $40,000 to
$50,000 a year would see no change or an increase in their taxes.

Meanwhile, of people with incomes over $1 million, only 39.9%
would see no change or an increase in their taxes, while 60.1%
would get a cut of more than $100.